She J. D. BIVLNS, Managing Editor Established 1880 $100 per year, in advance VOLUME XXIV. ALBEMARLE, N. C, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 10. 1915 NUMBER 12 REMARKABLE INDUSTRY WHERE YAH RIVER FLOWS Aluminum Company Building Whe.-ei One Can Look From Mountain Tops ' Over Knobs and Hills and Let Im-j agination Riot Without Limit A Revelation of What Men Are Doing With Natural Forces. I Bion H. Butler, in the News and Ob server. Albemarle, Feb. 5. Bad as I need money I would give my nickle that ! has a big hole in it if I could lead the ' population of North Carolina over aj little journey that I have taken from; Albemarle out to Badin, and down to ! the dam building there by the Hard-; away Construction Company for the( Aluminum Company of America, and over the hills from which a view may j be had of the panorama which the, mountain tops disclose. A man can! stand on the top of one of the high knobs out there above the river and . let his imagination riot without limit, and the chances are he will never reach the real outer fringe of the pos sibilities that are ahead. I have seen a lot of the big things that men have done, and a lot of the ambitious plans that have been pro jected, and a lot of the famous indus trial developments of our country, but here is one that more nearly gets me off my feet than anything else I have ever tried to cipher out. For a dozen years or so I have been figuring on aj trip through the Narrows of the Yad-i kin river, but although I have been in ! gun-shot three or four times, it has i never been possible to get down to the. river side in the bottom of the Nor- rows until this trip. j It is worth the money. It is worth the money as a natural , bit of scenery, or as a revelation of! what men are doing with the natural! forces of the State. The plans at Badin have already been outlined. The I Aluminum Company of America has i taken the holdings and the develop-1 ment of the French predecessors, and j enlarged schemes are now pushing along to make this one of the big af- i fairs of the world of production. I I dropped down into the gorge j where the work is in progress and i nosed around in the den of Cyclops, and it was not hard to imagine that somewhere among the giant rocks the Titans might be encountered forging thunderbolts, or anything, enormous and powerful. The Wonderful Yadkin. It is hard to realize that the Yad kin river which is crossed by a bridge about a quarter of a mile long up at Whitney, is pressed into such small compass that in the gorge it is com pletely blocked up by a coffer dam of concrete and its entire water content compelled to turn aside and burrow under the mountain in two restricted tunnels before the water can continue on its seaward journey. For millions of years I would guess this old river has been diligently cutting a rocky course through the intensely hard vol canic. crystalline schists that have re sisted so successfully that while its channel a few miles above is half a mile wide, at some points in the Nar rows it is barely sixty feet. Through that refractory rock the river has worked its course, and undisputed it has held sway until men came to as sert an intelligent authority. Then as docile as a kitten, this powerful current slips aside into the tunnels cut for it, a coffer dam is thrown across the narrow channel, and no man has an idea when water will again flow down the original stream. When the Hardaway Construction Company pulls out from the Yadkin they will leave behind one of the great hydro-electric powers of the United States, and one of the most interest ing additions to the picturesque scen ery of North Carolina that has ever been undertaken. Across the valley the work cf build ing the big dam has been taken up again. In two or three weeks the construction company will be moving 30,000 yards of rock and earth a month, and in a little longer time that limit will be doubled. About 1, 500 hands will be busy, with 25 loco motives, or more than many of the small railroads own, 50 big 50-ton flat cars and 75 of the smaller side dump flats, 45 steel derricks of 20 tons capacity, with 115 foot masts and 100 foot booms, an outfit suit able for Cyclops. Those derricks pick up a lead of 20 tons of rock or earth and set it down in the flat car, so that about three or four swings of the derrick boom loads a car and it is ready to move. To operate the machinery that is building the dam wires have been strung from electric plants of the Southern Power Company, and a cur rent equivalent to 7,000 or 8,000 horse power is available in this job of build ing. Stupendous Power. ! It is useless to go into any detail ' of this thing, for it is of such magni-j tude that figures do not express any-j thing. One comparison will be enough, j The idea is to generate 100,000 horse I pewer. At the last census 14 States1 of the Union reported the use of less! than that total of power for the en-' tire State. The vast scope of terri-! tory comprising Nebraska, Wyoming,! Idaho, and Utah used just about asj much power as this one big plant will : develop. There are several right pre tentious industries in the United States that do not use so much pow er for the entire industry. All the tobacco factories in the country could be run by the Badin dam, and enough power left over to run all the facto ries making men's and women's cloth ing. Badin could run all the agricul tural implement factories in the Uni ted States, or all the boot and shoe factories and leave power for some thing else. That's the Badin dam. The Harda way Construction Company will get three million for building it. That is another way to get an idea of the size of the job. Rising 170 feet from the surface of the water the dam will connect the hills above the river with a wall if masonry a quarter of a mile long, which will be topped by a driveway 18 feet wide. It is the intention of the people of North Carolina to build a road from Wilmington to Charlotte which will cross the river at the xlam, and a more interesting route of travel will not be found in America. Ap proaching the dam from either side the tourist will find himself in the air almost two hundred feet above the valley below him. Stretching away up the stream will be the biggett mountain landlocked body of water in this part of the South. Nine square miles of the country will be submerg ed, the pool extending nearly ten miles up the valley, and widening out into ever natural hcllow made by the streams that enter the river. A ten mile lake, reaching almost to the mountain tops, commanding a view of the country for miles in all directions and convenient to every portion of the State by a modern road fit for travel from every quarter, shouM make the Badin highway one of the most popular south of the Potomac. The people of Albemarle are talking of securing the club house at Whit ney, which stands on the summit above the Whitney dam, and under taking to make of that mountain top a summer and winter resort, a project, which, if carried out, should fill this section with visitors at all seasons of the year. Fine Highways. The road scheme is close to materi alization, for already much of the stretch between Wilmington and the dam is built. From Fayetteville to West End the Capital highway is one of the best in the State, and from West End to Troy .the road is in fair ly good shape most of the way. The distance from Troy to the river is not great. From the river to Albemarle, Stanly county has already built a good road, and the counties to Char lotte are working on the job. Lexington is agitating the question of a road to Badin, and other counties are figuring on getting on the east and west line that will come from the coast to the foothills. The road from Raleigh, through Chatham and Lee is counting on a short-circuit across Moore county to Montgomery, and a conection with the Charlotte road past Badin. From all directions eyes are turned this way, the ambition to be on the picturesque road being com mon. The purchase of the Badin plant by the Aluminum Company of America has resulted in the changing of plans. The new owners are anxious to make a bigger job than the old ones had figured on. One of the first things was to condemn the old power house and arrange for a new one. So a fine, big, 'new building, not yet finished, in fact, is going into the junk heap to make way for a more powerful in stitution just across the narrow river. The old building was meant to shel ter units of some 11,000 horse power, with horizontal delivery. The new plant will have four vertical units of 1 25,000 horse power each, delivering water from gigantic pen-stocks in torrents that will be outside the range of comprehension in their power. An Industrial Factor. j This dam on the Yadkin is not the ! aluminum plant. It is to be simply the factor that provides the power and the heat. It is like the engine at the cotton mill, or the wheel at the water mill. After all the work is done, and the dam finished, and the water wheels are turnincr, and the wheel generators are loading the wires with their enormous force, the whole purpose of this outfit it to sun ply the big factories back on the hill. The power plant and dam are in the1 gorges of the narrows. The town of Badin is back from the river, and high' above the water line that will be es tablished after the tunnels are close 1 and the head is raised when the dam is built, and the power houses are completed and the Allis-Chambers I wheels and generators are installed, j the upper end of the tunnels will baj blocked up with rock and cement, and ; the gorge from the dam up will give; way to a lake that will drown out the ' river entirely. The river will ston.l With the dam drawn down below the: spillway by the requirements of the, mills, when the gates are shut at night or on Sundays it will be pos-j sible to cut out for a period the flow ; of water in the Yadkin It ceases to be a river under certain conditions. A. river comes into the lake. A river; will go out from the power house when the water runs through thsi wheel pits. But a link of eight or: ten miles will be cut out of the Yadkin ! henceforth. The surplus water is not to run . away over the dam. At a certain ele vation shafts have been cut down to tha tunnels, and when the water gets' so high that it is desired to permit the surplus to escape it is to enter the j tunnels below where they are shut up i and to flow away into the river at the1 lower end of the tunnels. Henceforth the Yadkin will emerge from the I mountains below the Badin dam in the form of a gigantic spring, break ing forth either at the tail race, or at the foot of the tunnels, a transfor mation of a river that has few if any parallels. Drains 4,000 Square Miles. The Yadkin dam is going to have a j salutary influence on the water flow i of the stream below. The drainage j area of the dam is about 4,000 square miles, or about 400 times the area of; the pond at the dam. As the water used at the dam will have a constant tendency to draw the head down the pond will act as a reservoir for the valley. An inch of railfall over the entire area drained by the river, if discharged into the river and brought down immediately, would fill only 35 feet of the higher part of the pool. The normal rainfall of the territory drained is about 50 inches, or an inch a week. The dam can permit the power plant to figure on something like an average supply of water, be cause it is so big it can store flood water against the day of scant rain fall, and when floods come after pe riods of low water the prospect will be that the water in the pool is low enough to store a large proportion of the water that comes down in ordi nary floods. The result will be that such a vast lake will bring the average of power up to an unusual figure, and that the frequent floods will be modified to a flow of water more nearly uniform the year round. The high water that comes from above will be held in the dam until it is filled to the limit, and all the nine miles of surface raised to the high point. That reserve supply will be turned loose day by day to the capacity of the plant, and not oniy will the Badin power supply be re?-J ulated by the uower of the dam t) hold the flood water against the day of low water, but the dams on the river below will be to considerable ex tent guarded from the extremes that have been common in the past, for a more uniform flow at this dam will mean a more uniform flow at all points down the stream. This means a great er average power for the prospective development farther down the nar rows where the Aluminum Company owns another location capable of 50, 000 horse power, and at the other shoals until Blewett's Falls is reach ed, where the storage of the Badin dam should prove highly beneficial. 3,500 to 5,000 Employees. On the hill at Badin, high above the dam, hundreds of men are at work preparing the buildings for utilizing I the power when it is ready. That will! i not be until the last of the year. In; Uhe meanwhile it is proposed to ue; power from the Southern Power Com-' with but one good leg. Now that wef harlotte-Pinehurst Road, Serving as pany's plants, for it is the intentio i can prove up competency in any di-j Connecting Link Between Good to begin the manufacture of alumi- j rection, it is permissible to insist that Eastern and Western Roads Meet um within the next few weeks. H we have both feet firmly on the nK to Be Held Here March 9. is said that the work to be undertaken, ground. ! The Charlotte-Pinehurst road will will be thp production of the metal j A (;0O(j Combination. ! be built. When a people become so in the pig, which will be sent to New ; i thoroughly aroused over a proposi- Kensinpton, near Pittsburg, for fur-! If you think about it a minute yoution and see the great advantage of ther manufacture, and to Edgewood, will be gratified at the combination it as the people all along the propo.s in the New York territory. The over at the river. Pennsylvania, ed line of this road, it is only a queo buildings put up for the French Com- Georgia, and North Carolina, one sup-jtion of time when things will hap pany are almost in condition to ope- plying the money and the knowledge pen. The people of Charlotte, Con rate, but at the same time an army of of the manufacthre of the metal, one cord, Mt. Pleasant, Salisbury, Albe men is busy increasing house room for : supplying the ability to construct the;marle, Troy, Mt. Gilead, and Pine the big factories, and enlarging the gigantic dam and power, and the third hurst want this road and they want facilities. From 3,500 to 5,000 hands ! affording the natural opoprtunityi it bad enough to get busy. And no is the number that the wise men say for the first and second to combine ! wonder, when one stops to think that will be employed, although not muci'and all profit by ihe generosity of this road will be the connecting link is said officially by any one at th.; nature. in the State's most important high- plant, as the management that is to! It makes a man feel pretty good tj; way from the seacoast to the moun handle the factorw has not as yet ar- stand on the mountain top above a tains. But, the latest and best news rived from the North. i job like this one and realize that i is that a meeting has been arranged Real estate dealers are swarming; while Europe is divided in a war in at Badin and in the neighborhood, j which killing each other is the main Much is doing in their line. The I object, America is united in subduing prospects are that a revolution ri the mighty forces of nature and ii prices is ahead. Town lot schemes j working for the immediate welfare of are in evidence, and employing a lot 'the whole continent and the whole hu- of hands. New buildings are provid-;man ing work for a lote of people. Badin industrially is already very much alive. We have seen what the big dam means. It is one of the big sources of power in this big country, and thej power is wholly for this one industry.1 I am told by semi-official authority gtuart R Marshall, the manager :,f j Montgomery county attorney, and Ed that the power development at Badin 1 the Badin properties for the Alumi- par Haywood, clerk of the superior is not a fourth of what this concern num Company of America, was a Sal-.coart of Montgomery county, were i.i will ultimately use. But there is a ' isbury vipitor this morning. Mr. 'Albemarle on Tuesday. They are en simpler way to try to comprehend I Marshan was enroute for the proper-! thusiastie and they report that the what it all means. The manufacture tieg and left on a later train for citizens of their good county are also of aluminum commenced in 1883, in : Badin . ' "d-hot over the proposition. They which year the amount produced was1 While in the city Mr. Marshall waste11 us Albemarle people that Mont 83 pounds. Three years later the'the center of a ' of entk.men fernery county means to have a good quantity had increased to 3,000 pounds, being still wholly experimei- tal. In 1887 it had increased to 18,- 000 pounds, six times as much, but still not enough to indicate an estab-1 lished industry. Three years more' saw it increased almost three and a half times, while another two years, saw that increase multiplied to four times as much more. Aluminum Production. By 1896 aluminum had established itself with an annual production of j a ciean, white and sanitary town, one far above a million pounds. The next that will appeal to the very best peo year it boosted that figure to thr e pie and assure the most excellent con times as much. Climbing in goo.l ' ditions of living for those who work earnest. Six years later it had dou-1 w;th the company, bled again, and three years later it! To this Mrs. Marshall will give doubled again, now reaching a pro- much attention and only the most duction of almost 15,000,000 pounds, sanitary methods will be employed Three years more and the production ' and the most healthy conditions will doubled one more, and in 1912 it had be fostered. almost doubled again, the total pro-! "We will build a hospital and have duct being above 65,600,000 pounds. 'a physician in charge," said Mr. In 1913 it climbed again to 72,379,000. j Marshall. For while we do not ex I do not have the figures since the pect much sickness, there will be but it is no doubt still heading up- j some, and it is our intention to take ward, for the things made of it are the very best care of such cases as becoming more common every da;'. ' we do have." The fact is that the use of aluminun ' "We expect to build a large store seems now only to have commenced, That being the case we can see how j while we will not have anything to j a short while of the county eommio it is actually starting something out do with the management of the store,! sioners of gtanly and Montgomery in the north end of Stanly county, and we want it operated to the best inter-! counties, jointly, with some of the incidentally in this town of 'Albe-' est of the community so that it j ieading 'men 0f w two counties, for marie. : will serve tne wants and needs ot tiie The introduction of aluminum in people." many new lines promises to make it' Mr. Marshall stated that he forge ahead in production as fast i.i ' thought the company would be mak the future as it has in the past. New ing aluminum before the end of the uses are for electric wires, in whi;h present year. Not on a large scale it has the advantage of being the perhaps, but he gave it as his opinion lightest wires known, a good conduc- that the company would be in opera tor, and a strong wire. Being strong tion before the end of the year, it can be depended on for suspendod The Aluminum Company of Amor wires, and being light a lot of wires ica is one of the largest business con- do not overload the poles and towers like iron and copper wires do. Alu- minum is also coming into use rapidly ufacturing plants and power proper for tubing, as it has several advanN ties. One of the largest properties of ages for use in that respect. It is not the company's holdings is that in poisonous like brass and lead, does Southwestern North Carolina, where not corrode like iron, stands heat, is j large power is being developed for light and in every way adaptable for the operation of the manufacturing ordinary pipe construction. plants across the State line in Ten- A thing that caught me at Badin j nessee. was the fact that the big dam job is in I Mr. Marshall declared that he was the hands of a contracting company on his way to Badin to go to work. that is of the South. The Hardaway Company comes from Columbus, Ga. That it is a thoroughly competent ! company is shown by two tests. It! has been doing several jobs of this character for the Southern Power Co., and it gets the job at Badin from men. who want efficiency. Three million dollar jobs are not given out except to men who can show right good re. - sons for getting them. The Hardaway Company is about the biggest concern doing this class of work. Its annual contracts run about $5,000,000. The reason this interested me is because it shows the United States is coming to be a nation of efficiency and ability in every quarter. Then it was left for Northern contractors to do all thej big things as if there were a country; race, An American has a right to get chesty sometimes. BADIN WILL BE A WHITE AND A SANITARY TOWN; Salisbury Post, Feb. 1st. , jntp,.pKted in the larire dpVeloDmentsi down the river. He talked to a rep-! Per P,e OI aansoury are anxious lor a resentative of the Post, and while he!loafl connecting that good town with Louid no p-jve anv details of the j. undertaken in Stanly county by Salisbury in close connection witn hi, Pmnonv hp trave a few of the'tn's great mountain-to-the-sea high- large outlines of the company and jts Work. Mr. Marshall said that there would be built at the site cf the company's properties at Badin a model town. It is his intention, and that of the coin- nanv ne renresents. to build at Badin i room also," said Mr. Marshall, "andl cerns of the country. It owns large landed estates and a number of man- He said there would be much activi- ty at Badin beginning at once, that he would be a very busy man and at this time could not nay much about the plans and the details ahead of him. Mr. Marshall is a man of forceful personality and clearly a man ac quainted with large dealings. As soon :as his home at Badin is completed he will move in and remain close to the heart of things. Mr. Marshall is in charge of all properties in North Carolina, this in cludes the large holdings in the western part of the State. Mr. Marshall said that these de- FROM THE MOUX- TAINS TO THE SEA ' for committees and all interested cit izens all along the proposed line to be held in Albemarle on March 9, when the matter will be taken up in earnest. The commissioners of Stan ly, Cabarrus and Montgomery coun ties will be on hand and a large crowd of boosters will be here to push the thing to some practical conclusion so that work may be started at once. Now, let every one talk the road and be here March 9. The Montgomery county people are red-hot for the road. Messrs. R. T. Pool, a leading ,oad to Badln at whatever cost The Albemarle and Badin. This will put way, and will also give Albemarle two outlets to the National Highway passing Salisbury. Mt. Pleasant is re ported to be anxious and Concord, also. Therefore, Albemarle will soon be situated on one of the most im portant highways of the State. Gen tlemen, is it worth while? Let's not allow the opoprtunity to pass without taking advantage of it. Contributed. That Road to Southern Pines. Correspondent. The question of a highway from Charlotte to Southern Pines by way of Albemarle and Badin is taking on a more tangible form, and so enthus iastic are the people of Stanly anrt Montgomery counties, as well as all others along the route for this road, that it is safe to predict that within a few months work will have been commenced in .earnest, towards the; immediate completion of the highway. a rneetinir will be called here within the purpose of taking the matter up properly and coming to some definite conclusion as to where the road will go, the crossing of the Yadkin rive1', etc. It is learned here, through Mr. Marshall, general superintendent of the works at Badin, that the report which has gone out as to the cross ing on top of the big dam is incor rect. Mr. JJaishall says this will !u impossible, but that company will I otherwise assist in voting a crossin over the Yadkin. It would, there fore, seem that the only way of crossing the river with this highway will be by the construction of a steel bridge. There are many supporters of the road here, as well as in Mont gomery county who think the bridge will have to be built at Swift Island Ferry and go by way of Mt. Gilead. j velopments would mean a great deal to the State at large as well as to the immediate vicinity. This can be very readily appreciated, for the plans of the corporation are to build a town that would be a credit to any section, one that will be builded and operated along modern lines, with everything done to make it a city of happy homes and contented people. This is very clear fdea of what the Aluminum Company of America has in mind and in the manager it has, in mind and in the manager it has a man who grasps the significance of the situuticn and with a clear vision will work these plans into reality.